Friday, November 30, 2012

Nam Nam Noodle Bar, Wheelock Place


Here's a mixed beef pho from Nam Nam Noodle Bar down at the basement of Wheelock Place. Since I have not had pho in Vietnam before, I have no real basis for comparison except for those from the local Vietnamese joints. The broth was disappointing. One could say it was a little bland. Coming from Annam (and by that virtue, Les Amis as well), I had expected better. Sure the tripe was tasty and the miserable portions of sliced beef were nice and pink. But the briskets were rubbery and tough that I couldn't eat them at all. Is this how pho is suppose to taste like?

I would also recommend a pass on their Viet "drip coffee".  It didn't taste anything like it. I'm not sure I could bring myself back again even if I was curious about the bahn mi.

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Smoke Shack, Republic Plaza

Smoke Shack, the new yorker
the New Yorker

I have been wanting to try the sandwiches at Smoke Shack (9 Raffles Place, #B1-06 Republic Plaza, tel : +65 6557 2214) for the longest time. Due to the cosmic alignment of their operating hours and the place that I work, it was impossible for me to. Then chance presented itself one day.

I suppose I had been expecting to be impressed rather than just thinking that they weren't bad. I wouldn't mind eating them again if the opportunity presented, but we weren't left with "I need to come back again and soon".

Honestly, these guys are indeed on of the better sandwich places along with what I remember of Simply Bread. Sadly as well. Brewerkz still takes the cake for their pastrami fillings to date.

Smoke Shack, the reuben
the Reuben

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Nasi Lemak Kukus, Upper Thomson Road

Nasi Lemak Kukus

It's amazing how difficult it can be to find good nasi lemak rice these days. Most vendors today have either succumbed into sloth or subscribed to the religious fear of cholesterol resulting in their food becoming downright bland and /or mediocre.

I'm not saying that Nasi Lemak Kukus (908 Upper Thomson Road, tel : +65 8222 9517) falls in either ends of the spectrum. I think they did a pretty decent job being somewhere favourable in between.

Their rice was moist and fragrant with coconut. They also had a very decent & savoury sayur lodeh and treated the ayam goreng in the correct manner that the meat wasn't overly dried out and fell off the bone with relative ease. I enjoyed their mutton rendang too, though their dry and very chewy paru goreng really wasn't my style at all.

I guess what else was attractive of from them was that we got to serve ourselves (free flow of rice?) what we wanted and there were options for the sides. Their appeal altogether so far has gotten me to drop by twice. But all that came with a cost as well since it didn't cost anything close to cheap for their food. Still I think this stall is doing something in the right direction.

Wok to Walk, La Rambla, Barcelona

Barcelona, Wok to Walk

We were to an extent, pretty amused by this dinner of Chinese food from a chain stall in Barcelona. Wok to Walk (95 La Rambla, Barcelona, tel : +31 02 06250721) does Chinese stir fried noodles and rice takeouts in those iconic little paper boxes. I don't think that people in China use them too, but I could be wrong. It was for the first time in our lives eating with them.

How this place worked was for the customer to select their choice of carbs from a small variety of noodle type or rice, followed by additional ingredients and then a sauce of choice. The bar of ingredients looked like something from a pizza place, but most if not all Chinese food places don't even provide options with such variety. This did and in a way, was great. Before anyone scoffs at them, we had seen real Chinese cooking videos uploaded by tourist from the streets of Beijing and they cooked exactly like those street hawkers in China!

In any case, the food was actually reasonably tasty. No surprise considering the consistent queue that this joint generated even off the peak meal hours. Their hot sauce was expectedly a little milder than I had in mind, but the options of chilli that one could help themselves with resulted in a respectable heat more fiery than any chilli char kuey teow I've ever had.

Barcelona, Wok to Walk

Barcelona, Wok to Walk

Barcelona, Wok to Walk

Barcelona, Wok to Walk

I normally avoid faces in photos, but I thought these guys that were sweating behind the bar churning out endless orders of stir fried noodles looked amusingly bored.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Casa Guinart, El Raval, Barcelona

Casa Guinart, El Raval

We walked by this location (La Rambla, 95 Barcelona, tel :   93 317 8887) a couple of times and noticed it because it looked notches better than most of the eating places in the vicinity. We remembered it because it was just across from a Chinese food place that looked interesting. Not to mention too that it was located just beside Mercato San Josep where a certain very popular Bar Pinotxo can be found.

The other thing that piqued our interest was the progressive direction of the food which seemed not in abundance around this region. Food that looked a little more fun, welling from traditional roots.

Barcelona, Casa Guinart, bread tomato

We had some crusty bread rubbed in tomato and olive oil. Fruity from the oil and refreshing from the cold tomatoes that were stained onto the bread. It was a nice refreshing start for a meal.

Barcelona, Casa Guinart, squid

Grilled squids from House Guinart were excellent. I would have preferred a little more char, but I guess the meat would also have turned out less tender than they would have wanted to serve.

Barcelona, Casa Guinart, beans jamon

Next came a platter of beans sautéed with diced jamón. The flavors came from probably a splash of vinegar and the smokiness of the ham that was cooked together with the legumes, brought together by some salt.

Barcelona, Casa Guinart, knife

We were given a rather unusual knife for the food. The sharpened side was the straight side, not the curved. Most of the other people here still used the blunt curved end to cut their food.

Barcelona, Casa Guinart, chutoro

We ordered seared chutoro to see how Casa Guinart treated them. The taste was decidedly very oriental with soy being a base note for the flavour. The insides of the tuna belly were fortunately still rare.

Barcelona, Casa Guinart, burgers

The tapas sized house burgers from Casa Guinart looked pretty interesting. Not sure what went into them but they weren't as beefy as I liked and it was probably due to the heavy handed fruity/tart flavour that the makers tried to put in them. I'm thinking it had to do with the onions, grain mustard and possibly the crystalline globules which I hadn't a clue was what. It was all a little too jam like for something that had beef and didn't have enough of the cow as balance.

Barcelona, Casa Guinart, lamb

The only thing that was truly disappointing came in the form of their baby lamb ribs. I was thinking grilled rather than breaded and deep fried since the menu mentioned nothing about how all their food were prepared. It just said baby lamb ribs. The flavour of the lamb were non existent and we were mostly chewing breading off bone that was fried in oil that had been sitting in the fryer for quite a while. We left it mostly untouched. The best part of this dish was their super airy aioli which was for dips.

These guys handled feedback quite graciously and didn't bill us for the lamb

Would I come back? Probably. For some other things that I have yet to try.

Kapadokya, Rambla del Raval, Barcelona

Barcelona, Kapadokya

It was a Sunday. Many of the restaurants weren't open and we weren't interested in shops trying to rob us off more money than what it cost back home to eat paella. We had missed the opening hours for Suculent because we found out too late and in the end, ran into this really nice spot for kebabs (Rambla del Raval, 15, Barcelona). Just a 15 second stroll across the road right from our hotel. It seems that the Raval district is filled with kebab joints and I hear that they're pretty good.

It also didn't elude our notice that the name of this joint was a variant of Cappadocia.

Barcelona, Kapadokya, doner kebab

The food here was affordably priced, good but not out of this world. Portions were also hearty. Just what we needed after a series of disappointments from the dearth of options. If I would gripe, I only wished that their doner kebabs came with lamb options. But I wouldn't. The juicy köfte was skillfully spiced with enough flavors that didn't threaten the flavour of the lamb. It was such a pity that we only had one meal here and didn't have more time to explore the other similar joints of the neighbourhood.

Barcelona, Kapadokya, kofte